Nepal: Sharmila BK, a 25-year-old new mother from ward 8 of
photo: TKP
Health
officials from the district, however, said that infection was the reason for
the new mother’s death.
A
one-month-old baby from Bheri Municipality of Jajarkot died of pneumonia some
two weeks ago. Doctors at the district hospital, where the baby was rushed for
treatment after his condition deteriorated, had referred the baby to Nepalgunj
upon arrival at the hospital emergency. However, the baby succumbed to the
complications, before his parents could take him anywhere.
Around
two dozen people including children and a new mother died from cold-related
ailments since the magnitude 6.4 earthquake hit Jajarkot and Rukum West of
“Hundreds
of quake-displaced pregnant women, new mothers, small children and elderly
people have been affected by the cold,” said Krishna Bahadur Khatri, an
official at the Health Office, Jajarkot. “As the temperature drops day by day,
we are worried particularly about small children, pregnant women, new mothers
and elderly people.”
Health
workers deployed in the affected areas said that the number of people suffering
from cold-related ailments has been growing in health facilities of the
affected areas.
“Around
70 ailing people visit our hospital every day for treatment of cold-related
ailments,” said Dr Bishal Upreti serving at a primary hospital in Nalgad
municipality. “Along with respiratory illness, small children have been
infected with winter diarrhoea.”
Health
workers deployed in affected villages for surveillance reported that pregnant
women and new mothers complained of fear of not getting proper care during
emergencies in the local health facilities.
“A
seven-month pregnant woman complained that she has been worried all the time,”
said Sumitra Khadka, a health worker at Khalanga of Bheri Municipality. “The
lives of children, pregnant women, new mothers and elderly people have become
miserable due to the cold.
Officials
from the Ministry of Health and Population concede that saving vulnerable
populations has become a challenge in the quake-affected areas. They said that
the displaced people should be shifted to temporary shelters from tents at the
earliest to protect them.
The
Health Ministry has also deployed experts for onsite clinical mentoring in the
health facilities of the two affected districts.
“Experts
will see the child delivery process and correct the problems if any at the
health facilities,” said Nisha Joshi, an official at the Family Welfare
Division under the Department of Health Services. “We hope that this measure
will help to lessen maternal and child mortality rate in the affected
districts.”
The
onsite clinical monitoring programme is aimed at improving obstetric and
newborn care and assesses its effectiveness on nurses’ knowledge and skill.
Officials hope that the move will help to reduce maternal and child deaths in
the quake-affected districts.
A
report on maternal mortality carried out by the National Statistics Office in
2021 showed that for every 100,000 live births, 151 women still died from
maternity-related complications.
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